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Fear of fish or ichthyophobia may refer to various cultural phenomena, such as fear of eating fish, or fear of dead fish, as well as to a specific phobia. Galeophobia is a subtype of ichthyophobia specifically focused on one type of fish: sharks.[1][2]
[edit] PhobiaIchthyophobia is a variety of a specific phobia which is an intense and persistent fear of fish, described in Psychology: An International Perspective as an "unusual" specific phobia.[3] Both symptoms and remedies of ichthyophobia are common to most specific phobias. John B. Watson, a renowned name of behaviorism, describes an example, quoted in many books in psychology, of conditioned fear of a goldfish in an infant and a way of unconditioning of the fear by what is called now graduated exposure therapy: [4]
In contrast, radical exposure therapy was used successfully to cure a man with a "life affecting" fish phobia on the 2007 documentary series, The Panic Room. [5] [edit] Cultural phenomenon
Historically, the Navajo people were described as being ichthyophobic,[6][7] due to their aversion to fish. However, this was later recognised as a cultural or mythic aversion to aquatic animals,[8] and not a psychological condition. [edit] Fear of eating fish
The Journal of the American Medical Association have published a research paper[9] addressing the fears of eating fish[10] because contaminants, such as mercury may be accumulated in fish. [edit] Cases of ichthyophobiaIn his autobiography, Italian footballer Paolo Di Canio describes finding that his then team-mate, Peter Grant suffered from ichthyophobia. During a practical joke, Di Canio describes Grant's fearful reaction after finding a salmon head in his bed.[11] Grant told The Independent that item in his bed was in fact a "shark's head" and "to say I got a fright when I put my feet between the sheets is an understatement."[12] [edit] See also[edit] References
[edit] External links
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